Three Keys to Experiencing God’s Presence and Power

Even when we can’t see what God is doing, drawing near, listening, and responding in faith positions us to experience His power and care.

Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you.
(James 4:8 ESV)

“God has a lot on his plate—people with cancer, marriages falling apart, teenagers battling addiction—and I don’t want to be clogging the lines in case somebody with something really important is trying to get through.”

smiling author Jodie Berndt with blue background and text overlay, "Three keys to experiencing God’s presence and power
How to pray when you can’t see what God is doing" from the CLub31Women devotional

I’ve heard that line, or some version of it, any number of times as I’ve talked with people about prayer. We don’t want to “bug” God with our problems. And if our particular worry or pain has gone on for a long time, we may wonder if God has some secret reason for our suffering. Maybe, we think, we are just supposed to endure it.

Is that what the crippled woman thought when she went into the synagogue where Jesus was teaching? She’d had what the Bible calls a “disabling spirit” for 18 years. Reading her story in Luke 13:10-17, my mind swirled with questions:  Was she hopeful? Discouraged? Resigned to her situation? Did she think Jesus could heal her? Did she wonder if he cared?

And could Jesus even see her in the crowd?

He could, of course. And when he did, Jesus stopped what he was doing—he interrupted his own sermon—to call her over. “Woman,” he said, “you are freed from your disability.” (Luke 13:12 ESV)

And with that, she stood up straight and praised God.

Three Keys to Experiencing God’s Power

The Bible doesn’t indicate that the woman asked to be healed; all we know is that she was “there.” She was at the synagogue where Jesus was teaching. And that, I think, is the first key to experiencing God’s transformational power:  Proximity.

We don’t have to know how to pray or what to ask for when we come to Jesus; we can simply show up. It doesn’t matter what our problem is—whether we are crippled by sickness, fear, addiction, uncertainty, or anything else—we discover security, along with things like wisdom and joy, as we draw close to God. “I will praise the Lord, who counsels me,” King David wrote. “With him at my right hand, I will not be shaken.” (Psalm 16:7-8 NIV)

woman walking on a path with text overlay, “We are never bugging God when we bring Him our needs. We are doing the very thing that delights Him.” from Jodie Berndt on the Club31Women devotional

But proximity isn’t the only key to experiencing God’s power. We also have to be willing to listen for his voice—and respond.

When Jesus stopped teaching and called the crippled woman to come forward, do you think she was nervous? Worried about being the center of attention? Concerned about bugging Jesus, especially in front of a crowd? I can imagine her feeling all of these things (particularly in a culture that did not value healthy women, let alone those who were sick or disfigured), but she didn’t let any of that hold her back.

Instead, she said responded to Christ. She said yes.

The woman positioned herself to be proximate to the Lord. She heard his call and said yes. And then, as she experienced freedom in Christ and stood upright for the first time in nearly two decades, the third step just came naturally:  She glorified God, in whose presence she found “fullness of joy.” (Psalm 16:11 ESV)

God knows the way that you take

Drawing near to God, responding to his invitation, and acknowledging his provision with thanksgiving and praise are three keys to experiencing—and enjoying—God’s presence. But they are not, for me, the biggest takeaway from this woman’s story.

For me, the most remarkable part of the story—and the part that has been transformational for my prayer life—is that the woman could not actually see Jesus, at least not like the others could. Depending on which Bible translation you prefer, she was “bowed together,” “bent over double”, or not able to “look upwards at all.” I imagine this gal longed to behold the Lord’s face but, hunched as she was, she could glimpse only his feet.

Job might have understood how she felt. In his suffering, he desperately wanted to see God—to know what God was doing, to plead his case, to get some sort of answer—but he could not find him.

“When he is at work in the north,” Job wrote, “I do not see him; when he turns to the south, I catch no glimpse of him.

“But,” Job continued, “he knows the way that I take; when he has tested me, I will come forth as gold.” (Job 23:9-10 NIV)

I don’t know about you, but when life has me weighed down and bent over (that is, when it’s a struggle to look upwards at all), or when I can’t perceive God or make sense out of what he is doing, those words breathe hope into my soul:  I catch no glimpse of him. But he knows the way that I take.

God knows the way that we take. And as we consider Christ’s tenderness in hitting pause on whatever he was talking about to attend to a crippled woman, we can be equally confident that when we come before God with our needs and concerns, we are never bugging him. We are doing the very thing that delights him.


In His Word

When [God] is at work in the north, I do not see him;
    when he turns to the south, I catch no glimpse of him.
But he knows the way that I take;
    when he has tested me, I will come forth as gold. (Job 23:9-10 NIV)


But for me, it is good to be near God;
    I have made the Lord God my refuge,
    that I may tell of all your works. (Psalm 73:28 ESV)


In Your Life

Where in your life do you feel disabled or weak? Is there a “crippling” relationship or circumstance that has gone on for so long that you cannot imagine anything changing? Do you worry that you’ll be “bugging” God if you pray, especially when you have no idea what he’s doing?

Instead of holding back, try leaning in. Draw close to God. Ask him to open your ears to his invitation—to let you hear the words he wants you to hear—and respond with praise. Glorify God, as the crippled woman did, knowing that he has both the power and the desire to set you free.


We Recommend

Discover more about drawing near to God in Praying the Scriptures for Your Life, a book filled with bite-sized chapters designed to help you sense God’s presence and experience his power in everything from your relationships to your health to your deepest worries and fears.

Jodie Berndt's book Praying the Scriptures for your Life

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